In Case You Were Wondering, Donald Trump Has Multiple Ties to the Dakota Access Pipeline

Trump and one of his top energy advisers stand to personally profit from the disastrous pipeline project.

Photo by Gage Skidmore / Flickr.

Since last week’s presidential debate, we’ve been hearing quite a bit about Donald Trump’s tax returns (or lack thereof). While the conversation has revolved around why Trump has chosen not to release his returns — as all presidential candidates have since 1980 — we do know some things about what those returns would reveal should he choose to make them public.

In particular, we already know quite a bit about Trump’s connections to the fossil fuel industry and to the Dakota Access Pipeline.

While much of Trump’s finances remain a mystery, he did have to file a financial disclosure form when he declared his candidacy for president (despite his claims, this is not the same and does not provide the same level of transparency as a tax return). This disclosure form shows significant investments in the fossil fuel industry, and two of the fossil fuel companies Trump holds stock in are directly funding the Dakota Access Pipeline.

This year, Trump disclosed between $1,500 and $50,000 in investments in the primary builder of the pipeline, Texas-based Energy Transfer Partners. This figure is down from the $500,000 to $1 million in investments he disclosed in 2015.

He also disclosed between $100,000 and $250,000 in investments in Phillips 66, which would own one-quarter of the Dakota Access Pipeline once completed.

Trump’s other (disclosed) fossil fuel investments include:

Chevron: $550,000 to $1,100,000

Occidental Petroleum: $500,001 to $1 million

Total: $501,000 to $1,015,000

BHP Billiton: $501,000 to $1,015,00

ExxonMobil: $50,000 to $100,000

Halliburton: $51,000 to $115,000

EOG Resources: $50,000 to $100,000

Schlumberger: $15,000 to $50,000

Conoco Phillips: $1,000 to $15,000

Shell: $1,000 to $15,000

Kinder Morgan: $2,000 to $30,000

But Trump’s ties to fossil fuels and infrastructure projects like the Dakota Access Pipeline don’t stop at his financial investments. They run deep through the team advising him on energy policy, including top adviser and oil billionaire Harold Hamm.

Hamm is Trump’s energy adviser, campaign surrogate, and the CEO of the largest fracking company in the country, Continental Resources. Hamm, who maxed out contributions to Donald Trump’s presidential campaign, also contributed hundreds of thousands of dollars to the Republican National Committee’s efforts to elect Trump. He’s made billions of dollars drilling and fracking for oil in North Dakota, and it would be Continental’s oil that would flow through the Dakota Access Pipeline if completed.

Hamm recently announced to investors that oil fracked from his North Dakota holdings would be transported by the pipeline, and he anticipates huge profits for himself when the project is completed.

Finally, Energy Transfer Partners CEO Kelcy Warren donated $100,300 to Trump’s presidential campaign directly and $66,800 to the Republican National Committee after became the nominee.

Neither Trump nor his running mate Mike Pence has said anything about the Dakota Access Pipeline directly, or the fight by Indigenous communities to stop it. But with the #NoDAPL fight raging in the background, Trump has vowed to “streamline” pipeline permitting and do away with governmental oversight of fossil fuel infrastructure projects. He also promised to bring the Keystone XL Pipeline project back from the dead, which was halted by the Obama administration due to massive pushback from around the country.

What does it mean that Trump could personally profit off a project that tramples Indigenous rights and pushes us closer to climate disaster? For one thing — if Trump’s past investments are any guide — this project could well crash and burn, which would be a relief to the Standing Rock Sioux, the climate, and everyone in the path of this dangerous fossil fuel project.

Editor’s note: A previous version of this article cited fossil fuel investment figures from the 2015 financial disclosure form Trump filed when he announced his run for president. It was updated with figures from his most recent 2016 financial disclosure form on November 14, 2016 and again on November 30, 2016 to include donations to the Trump campaign from Energy Transfer Partners CEO Kelcy Warren.

Jesse Coleman is a researcher with the Greenpeace Investigations team. His focus is on front groups, fracking, and the oil and gas industry. Jesse's work has been featured in The Guardian, The New York Times, The Colbert Report, Al-Jazeera, MSNBC, and NPR.